This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, click the "Reprints" link at the bottom of any article.

March 18, 2013

Do You Really Need to File That Social Media Post With FINRA?

SEC Investment Management issues guidance on which posts should and should not be filed

More On Legal & Compliance

from The Advisor's Professional Library

Books and Records Rule
Thorough and complete books and records enable RIAs to demonstrate that they have fulfilled their fiduciary obligations to clients and complied with applicable rules and regulations.

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Information
This information sheet contains general information about certain provisions of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and selected rules under the Advisers Act. It also provides information about the resources available from the SEC to help advisors understand and comply with these laws and rules.

The Securities and Exchange Commission released Friday guidance clarifying which social media posts mutual funds and other investment companies must file with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Mutual funds and investment companies are required to file certain advertisements for review by the regulator. But out of an “abundance of caution, many mutual funds and other investment companies may file materials on their social media sites with FINRA unnecessarily,” the SEC investment management staff says.

The guidance states that “certain interactive content need not be filed” with FINRA.

Whether a post or set of posts should be filed, IM staff says, depends on its “content, context and presentation” and requires consideration of such factors as whether the post is “merely a response to a request or inquiry from the social media user or is forwarding previously filed content.”

Examples of when a communication doesn’t need to be filed include:

— An incidental mention of a specific investment company or family of funds not related to a discussion of the investment merits of the fund.— The incidental use of the word “performance” in connection with a discussion of an investment company or family of funds, without specific mention of some or all of the elements of a fund’s return (e.g., 1-, 5- and 10-year performance).

The guidance provides examples of the kinds of communications that the staff believes would be subject to a requirement to file with FINRA and examples of communications that would not trigger a filing requirement.

The guidance was released by the SEC’s Division of Investment Management under the first in a series of IM guidance updates.